logo
Reform Wales: Welsh party leader questions 'a distraction'

Reform Wales: Welsh party leader questions 'a distraction'

BBC News02-05-2025
The question of who leads Reform UK into next year's Senedd election has been dismissed as a "distraction" by the man handling the party's communications in Wales.Llyr Powell said Nigel Farage was party leader and "at the moment, there's no one we're going to appoint as the leader of the party [in Wales]".Powell was speaking after Reform won its first UK Parliamentary by-election, taking the Labour north west of England seat of Runcorn and Helsby from Labour, and its first mayoral election, in Greater Lincolnshire.Reform hopes to win its first Senedd seats next May. Recent polls suggest support for the party is closely behind Labour and neck-and-neck with Plaid Cymru.
Asked on Radio Cymru's breakfast programme Dros Frecwast if Reform has a leader in Wales, Powell said: "The leader of the party is Nigel Farage, but in Wales there are a lot of people who will be standing as candidates in the next election."Pressed on whether it would have a leader for the Senedd election, Powell responded: "In the next election, people will be able to see who stands, but words like 'leader in Wales' are just a distraction."At the moment, there's no one we're going to appoint as the leader of the party [in Wales]."Last month, Reform said Oliver Lewis, who represented Reform in Wales at last summer's general election campaign in debates and media interviews, will not be a candidate next year and is no longer the party's Welsh spokesperson.Last week, Farage refused to be drawn on whether Reform would appoint a new Welsh leader before the Senedd election, telling BBC Wales "give me time".Caroline Jones, Reform chair in the Vale of Glamorgan and Bridgend, called the English overnight election results "astounding".She was "looking forward to the Senedd elections and we will do very, very well", she added.
'So hacked off'
The Conservative shadow Welsh secretary at Westminster, Mims Davies, said Reform's electoral successes in England meant it now faced a test."This is about who runs your services, who steps up and delivers for you locally," she told BBC Radio Wales Breakfast."Reform are going to have to do that - moving from protest party to actually being in the driving seat and seeing if they can cut it and can deliver."On Labour's Runcorn by-election defeat, the party's Pontypridd Senedd member Mick Antoniw said a "lot of people" were "basically so hacked off by the Conservatives at the general election but don't feel yet that there's any inspiration or change coming from Labour"."But it is really early days for [the UK] Labour government," he said."A very difficult economic situation, all sorts of things happening internationally and we're only nine months in."Yet the "warning bells" were ringing for Labour and the party needed to "think carefully", Antoniw added.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US Vice President Vance's English getaway stirs up local opposition
US Vice President Vance's English getaway stirs up local opposition

Reuters

timea minute ago

  • Reuters

US Vice President Vance's English getaway stirs up local opposition

CHARLBURY, England, Aug 12 (Reuters) - U.S. Vice President JD Vance's working holiday in Britain was met with dismay by some locals on Tuesday, who gathered to register their disapproval of both his politics and the turmoil he has brought to their quiet corner of the English countryside. Vance has mixed work with leisure while in Britain, staying first with foreign minister David Lammy at the Chevening estate in Kent - where the two held a formal bilateral meeting after a spot of fishing - before moving on to the hamlet of Dean in Oxfordshire, in the picturesque Cotswolds. On Tuesday, several dozen people, including activists from the Stop Trump Coalition, gathered in the nearby town of Charlbury to stage what they called a "Not Welcome Party". They posed with cake and signs including pro-Palestinian slogans and messages saying "Go Home." A van showing an unflattering manipulated image of a bald Vance drove around Charlbury. "We want to show our feelings, hopefully some of it will get through to Vance and the American press and to Ukraine, so people know what we stand for," said Brian Murray, 65, a retired tour guide. "The fact he is in our backyard gives us a great opportunity to have our voices heard." Vance will meet on Tuesday evening with Robert Jenrick, a source in the opposition Conservative Party said. Jenrick was runner-up in the Conservative leadership contest last year, and is widely considered next in line for the job if it becomes available. The Telegraph newspaper said Vance would also meet Nigel Farage, the leader of the right-wing Reform UK party. Vance has developed a warm friendship with Labour's Lammy, officials said, with the two bonding over their difficult childhoods and shared Christian faith. Long a destination of the British elite - former British Prime Minister David Cameron lives in Dean - the Cotswolds is also becoming increasingly popular with wealthy Americans, some of whom moved to the region following the election win of President Donald Trump last year. TV personality Ellen DeGeneres has cited the election result as the reason behind her full-time relocation to the area. Around Charlbury, motorcades roared along the narrow country lanes and cordons blocked off roads to Dean, rendering it inaccessible. While Tuesday's protest was unlikely to disrupt the vice president's trip, for some locals, Vance's politics and the disruption were too much to swallow. "It's a massive intrusion and it's not just the fact our lives are disrupted but it's who he is," said Jonathan Mazower, the head of communications for NGO Survival International, who owns one of Dean's 15 homes. "I feel and many others feel we can't allow someone like that to come into our village and not say something publicly against it."

JD Vance has met Jenrick on Cotswolds visit but not expected to see Badenoch
JD Vance has met Jenrick on Cotswolds visit but not expected to see Badenoch

The Guardian

timea minute ago

  • The Guardian

JD Vance has met Jenrick on Cotswolds visit but not expected to see Badenoch

JD Vance has met Robert Jenrick during his holiday in the Cotswolds but is not expected to see the Conservative leader, Kemi Badenoch. Jenrick held an hour-long one-on-one meeting with the US vice-president on Tuesday evening, according to a source close to the shadow justice secretary. A Conservative spokesperson said that Badenoch was also speaking to Vance this week but that scheduling time for them to meet in person had proved difficult. Both Vance and Badenoch's teams played down the idea of a snub, but Vance's decision to hold a meeting with Jenrick will raise eyebrows. Jenrick was defeated by Badenoch in the Conservative leadership contest last year and is widely perceived to harbour continued ambitions for the top job. He has strayed well beyond his justice brief and repeatedly caused controversy with his incendiary language on migration. There are reports that Vance will also meet Nigel Farage, the Reform UK leader, on Wednesday. Farage's spokesperson did not reply to a request for comment. A Conservative source said that Jenrick was attending a drinks event with Vance on Tuesday evening alongside others, including the former chancellor George Osborne. They said Badenoch had been in contact with Vance but that they had been unable to find time for a meeting due to diary clashes. The US vice-president spent last weekend with David Lammy, the foreign secretary, while Badenoch has been in Epping and the Isle of Wight this week. Both Vance and Jenrick have expressed staunch opposition to equality, diversity and inclusion initiatives, and voiced concerns about the erosion of freedom of speech. In February, the vice-president claimed that a 'backslide away from conscience rights has placed the basic liberties of religious Britons' under threat, and he attacked the use of laws to enforce buffer zones around abortion clinics. Asked about his remarks before meeting Lammy last Friday, Vance claimed that his concerns related more widely to 'the entire collective west'. Vance is on holiday in the Cotswolds with his family and has been pictured visiting the Daylesford farm shop near Chipping Norton. Responding to reports that Farage was due to meet Vance, the Liberal Democrat leader, Ed Davey, called on Farage to 'tell the White House that in Europe we stand together against Putin's aggression'. He added: 'But Farage won't do that because he's much more interested in pleasing Trump than in standing up for British values and European security.'

Pious Palestine Action activists are nothing like the suffragettes
Pious Palestine Action activists are nothing like the suffragettes

Telegraph

time4 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Pious Palestine Action activists are nothing like the suffragettes

Now I know why Palestine Action and its cheerleaders always look so smugly satisfied with themselves – they think they're the new Suffragettes. Yes, these bourgeois brats in their red boiler suits and keffiyehs fancy themselves as a 21st-century incarnation of the women who rose up for the right to vote. They really do think their violent, childish rage against the Jewish State puts them on a par with those valiant ladies who fought for the franchise for their sex. They are drunk on self-delusion. They have a serious case of bloated ego. Someone needs to tell them – where those women were the great expanders of democracy, you are its enemies. All across the radical Left, they're making this criminally ahistorical comparison. When Home Secretary Yvette Cooper ordered the proscription of Palestine Action, loopy Corbyn-bot Zarah Sultana was fuming. How hypocritical, she said, for the likes of Cooper to celebrate the 'Suffragette legacy of civil disobedience' while damning this 'non-violent [sic] direction action group' as 'terrorists'. Owen Jones, with even more teenage spleen than usual, assured his readers that just as history has decreed that the Suffragettes were the good guys of the early 20th century, so it will smile equally generously on the Palestine preeners of today. 'History will praise those who did what they could to fight one of the great crimes of our age', he wrote. Even quite sensible voices now madly speak of Palestine Action in the same breath as the Suffragettes. Labour bigwig Lord Hain says Palestine Action's stunts are 'positively moderate' in comparison with the direct action carried out by Suffagettes. And yet PA is criminalised while those radical ladies enjoy 'iconic status'. Everyone needs to stop with this nonsense. It is a grotesque insult to the Pankhursts and all the other women who helped to make Britain a freer, fairer nation to liken them with the irritants and narcissists of Palestine Action. The difference between these two movements is so glaring it shouldn't even need stating. The Suffragettes took direct action because they were brutally locked out of the democratic realm. In contrast, the plummy grads of Palestine Action and their noisy cheerleaders in the leafy suburbs enjoy every democratic right. The right to vote, to speak, to march. And yet still they choose, to the vexation of decent Brits, to carry out their dumb stunts. The Suffragettes' direct action was an agonised cry for more democracy. Palestine Action's temper tantrums are a cry of *contempt* for democracy. The Suffragettes wanted in on the democratic process. Palestine Action is so consumed by a weary, haughty disdain for the democratic process – and for us plebs who are its subjects – that they prefer wrecking RAF planes or splashing red paint on 'evil' businesses to the far harder task of free, civil engagement. Their activism is profoundly anti-democratic. It's positively imperious. It is designed precisely to circumvent the democratic realm because these snobs in keffiyehs look upon the electorate as a thicko lost cause. The Israelophobic mania of the middle-class left is not a demand for democracy – it's a demand for admiration. Witness the pro-Palestine Action gathering in Parliament Square yesterday. What an orgy of sanctimony that was. It was essentially the upper middle classes forswearing Saturday brunch to descend on London and show us oiks what perfect moral beings they are. Rarely have we seen such a brilliant snapshot of the depthless levels of middle-class entitlement that fuel the cult of Palestinianism. It was a look-at-me stunt by the bored virtue-seekers of the professional managerial classes. The aim was less to 'raise awareness' of Gaza than to raise awareness of their own ethical brilliance. The Suffragettes took direct action because they wanted a real say in the nation's law-making. Palestine Action and its fawners take action because they want the world to know how special and caring they are. Let's boil it down. The Suffragettes hit the streets to make their own country a better place. Palestine Action and the rest of the radical left obsess like crazy over a tiny country 3,000 miles which they are convinced is the embodiment of evil.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store